Named Entity Results, Phrygia (Turkey)

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even the heads of senators, to
public view; so that Seneca says of the lake,
“id enim proscriptionis Sullanae spoliorum
est.”
“Who was not wounded there with PhrygianThis is a
fragment of a play of Ennius; by the words, “Phrygian steel”
he points out that these murders were chiefly committed by slaves, great numbers
of whom had lately been imported from Phrygia. Facciolati thinks too that allusion is made to the
Oriental and luxurious manners of
Sulla. steel?”
I need not enumerate all,—the Curtii, the Marii, the Mamerci, whom
age now exempted from battles; and, lastly, the aged Priam himself, Antistius, In the Brutus Cicero speaks of Antistius as a tolerable
speaker; he calls him here Priam, meaning that he acted as a sort of leader and king
among the

But how he as proquaestor harassed the republic of the Milyades, how he oppressed
Lycia, Pamphylia, Piscidia, and all Phrygia, in his levying corn from them, and valuing it according to
that valuation of his which he then devised for the first time, it is not necessary
for me now to relate, know this much, that these articles (and all such matters were
transacted through his instrumentality, while he levied on the cities corn, hides,
hair-cloth, sacks, but did not receive the goods but exacted money instead of
them),—for these articles alone damages were laid in the action against
Dolabella, at three millions of sesterces. And all
these things even if they were done with the consent of Dolabella, were yet all
accomplished through the instrumentality of that man

Do we ask what he did in the distant province of Phrygia? what in the most remote parts of Pamphylia? What a robber of pirates he proved
himself in war, who had been found to be a nefarious plunderer of the Roman people
in the forum? Do we doubt what that man would do with respect to spoils taken from
the enemy, who appropriated to himself so much plunder from the spoils of Lucius
Metellus? This temple of Castor had been vowed by Postumius,
the dictator at the battle of Lake Regillus. It was decorated with statues and
other embellishments by Lucius Metellus surnamed Dalmaticus, out of the wealth he
acquired by, and the spoils he brought back from, the war in Illyricum. who let out a contract for
whitewashing four pillars at a greater price than Metellus paid for erecting the
whole of them? Must we wait to hear what the wit

instead of corn. And so I suppose the cultivators begged of him, that,
as they could not sell a modius of wheat for three
sesterces, they may be allowed to pay three denarii instead of each modius.
Or, since you do not dare to say this, will you take refuge in that assertion, that,
being influenced by the difficulty of carriage, they preferred to give three
denarii? Of what carriage? Wishing not to have to
carry it from what place to what place? from Philomelium to Ephesus? I
see what is the difference between the price of corn at different places; I see too
how many days' journey it is; I see that it is for the advantage of the Philomelians
rather to pay in Phrygia the price which
corn bears in Ephesus, than to carry it to
Ephesus, or to send both money and agents
to Ephesus to buy corn.